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The only surviving cribstone bridge in the world Bennett Bridge: 1901: February 16, 1970: Wilson Mills: Oxford: Paddleford truss Carriage Paths, Bridges and Gatehouses: 1919, 1931 November 14, 1979: Acadia National Park: Hancock: Gothic arched bridges Churchill Bridge
Presumpscot Falls Bridge Replaced Reinforced concrete open-spandrel arch: 1913 1993 Allen Avenue Extension Presumpscot River: Falmouth: Cumberland: ME-14: Sieur de Monts Spring Bridge Extant Reinforced concrete closed-spandrel arch: 1940 1994 SR 3
Monitor-Merrimac Memorial Bridge-Tunnel, Interstate 664 beneath Hampton Roads between Newport News and Suffolk; Natural Tunnel, Norfolk Southern Railway near Duffield, actually a naturally formed cave used as a railroad tunnel; Pedestrian tunnel [49] beneath Shirley Highway (I-395) between Army Navy Drive and Pentagon south parking lot, Arlington
(The Center Square) – Maine's roadways, bridges and dams received mediocre grades in a new report, which suggests the state has made some progress on infrastructure upgrades following a historic ...
Location (in Maine) Built Length Truss Notes Union Falls Bridge Dayton: 1860 112 feet (34 m) Unknown A covered bridge built at Union Falls, a village that used to be in Dayton. It was blown up in 1921. [2] Watson Settlement Bridge: Littleton: 1911 170 feet (52 m) Howe: Farthest north and the youngest of Maine's original covered bridges.
This is a list of bridges in Portland, Maine. Casco Bay Bridge (Completed in 1997 to replace the Million Dollar Bridge over the Fore River. It connects Portland and South Portland.) Martin's Point Bridge (Original bridge was completed in 1828. New bridge opened in June 2014.) [1] Million Dollar Bridge (defunct; completed in 1916. Replaced by ...
Pages in category "Road bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Maine" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The New Portland Wire Bridge is a historic suspension bridge in New Portland, Maine. The bridge carries Wire Bridge Road across the Carrabassett River a short way north of the village center. Built in the mid-19th century, it is one of four 19th-century suspension bridges in the state. It is one lane wide, and has a weight limit of 3 tons.